Silk Road Mastermind Ross Ulbricht Convicted of All 7 Charges

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Silk Road Mastermind Ross Ulbricht Convicted of All 7 Charges

Courtesy Ulbricht Family.

A jury has spoken, and the mask is off: Ross Ulbricht has been convicted of being the Dread Pirate Roberts, secret mastermind of the Silk Road online narcotics empire.

On Wednesday, less than a month after his trial began in a downtown Manhattan courtroom, 30-year-old Ulbricht was convicted of all seven crimes he was charged with, including narcotics and money laundering conspiracies and a "kingpin" charge usually reserved for mafia dons and drug cartel leaders. It took the jury only 3.5 hours to return a verdict. Ulbricht faces a minimum of 30 years in prison; the maximum is life. But Ulbricht's legal team has said it will appeal the decision, and cited its frequent calls for a mistrial and protests against the judge's decisions throughout the case.

As the verdict was read, Ulbricht stared straight ahead. His mother Lyn Ulbricht slowly shook her head, and his father Kirk put a hand to his temple. After the verdict, Ulbricht turned around to give his family a stoic smile.

"This is not the end," Ulbricht's mother said loudly as he was led out of the courtroom. "Ross is a hero!" shouted a supporter.

Ulbricht's defense team quickly admitted at trial that Ulbricht had created the Silk Road. But his attorneys argued that it had been merely an "economic experiment," one that he quickly gave up to other individuals who grew the site into the massive drug empire the Silk Road represented at its peak in late 2013. Those purported operators of the site, including the "real" Dread Pirate Roberts, they argued, had framed Ulbricht as the "perfect fall guy."

"The real Dread Pirate Roberts is out there," Ulbricht's lead attorney Joshua Dratel told the jury in opening statements.

"What you saw in terms of length of deliberations is demonstrative of [what happens] when the defense is precluded and limited and circumscribed in the way that it was," Dratel told reporters outside the courthouse, confirming that he will appeal the decision.

"It was not an even playing field," added Ulbricht's mother. "It was not a fair trial."

Even so, the case's decision will no doubt be seen by many as U.S. law enforcement striking a significant blow against the dark web's burgeoning drug trade. More broadly, the case represents the limits of cryptographic anonymity tools like Tor and bitcoin against the surveillance powers of the U.S. government. In spite of his use of those crypto tools and others, Ulbricht couldn't prevent the combined efforts of the FBI, DHS, and IRS from linking his pseudonym to his real-world identity.

But Ulbricht will nonetheless be remembered not just for his conviction, but also for ushering in a new age of online black markets. Today's leading dark web drug sites like Agora and Evolution offer more narcotics listings than the Silk Road ever did, and have outlived law enforcement's crackdown on their competitors. Tracking down and prosecuting those new sites' operators, like prosecuting Ulbricht, will likely require the same intense, multi-year investigations by three-letter agencies.

If the feds do find the administrators of the next generation of dark web drug sites, as they found Ulbricht, don't expect those online drug lords to let their unencrypted laptops be snatched in a public library, or to have kept assiduous journals of their criminal conspiracies. The Dread Pirate Roberts' successors have no doubt been watching his trial unfold and learning from his mistakes. And the next guilty verdict may not be so easy.